Turn your favorite chemistry into a script worth reading aloud.

Write around couples, crushes, friends-of-friends, and the dynamics that make a room interesting without making anyone memorize a performance.

4-12

readers

30-90

minutes

PDF

+ print

The promise

A little drama, kept safely inside the script.

The tone can be romantic, chaotic, sincere, or absurd. The output still arrives as a practical reader packet with roles and cues.

The journey

From invite to applause.

1

You start the story

Pick the occasion, runtime, tone, and reader count. Add the dynamics that make this group specific.

2

Readers become the cast

Friends, lovers, relatives, and mixed groups get roles with enough context to read comfortably.

3

The packet takes shape

Preview the first pages, major beats, character context, and the materials that unlock after checkout.

4

Everyone reads together

Download the PDF, create the reading room, or order printed reader copies when the script is worth keeping.

Production Draft

Table Read

Reader packet

8readers
5scenes
PDF+ print
Script Together

The artifact

A warm studio packet, not a cold AI output.

The design system combines social invitation with credible production materials: cream paper, signal red, brass fasteners, typed labels, reader circles, revision tabs, and enough print detail to make the purchase feel tangible.

Screenplay-style PDF
Reader roles and context
Host notes and pacing cues
Preview pages before checkout
Digital reading room
Optional printed packets

Audience fit

Built for the shape of your group.

Built for couples nights, date weekends, wedding crews, and groups with excellent tension.

Couples

Shared history becomes plot

Pull in how people met, what they notice, and what they always say without turning it into a roast.

Mixed groups

Everyone gets a readable role

The script gives each reader a reason to speak, react, and stay present.

Keepsakes

Print the version you loved

When the read works, the packet becomes something the group can actually hold onto.

GEFRLOFAMY

Make the room part of the story.

Start with the people. End with a script packet, a reading room, and a story the group can actually perform together.

Start the scene